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World Wide Web (WWW)or WebLeading information-exchange service of the Internet. It was created by Tim Berners-Lee and his colleagues at CERN and introduced to the world in 1991. The Web gives users access to a vast array of documents that are connected to each other by means of hypertext or hyperlinks. A hypertext document with its corresponding text and hyperlinks is written in HTML and is assigned an on-line address, or URL. The Web operates within the Internet's basic client-server architecture. Individual HTML files with unique electronic addresses are called Web pages, and a collection of Web pages and related files (such as graphics files, scripted programs, and other resources) sharing a set of similar addresses (see domain name) is called a Web site. The main or introductory page of a Web site is usually called the site's home page. Users may access any page by typing in the appropriate address, search for pages related to a topic of interest by using a search engine, or move quickly between pages by clicking on hyperlinks incorporated into them. Though introduced in 1991, the Web did not become truly popular until the introduction of Mosaic, a browser with a graphical interface, in 1993. Subsequently, browsers produced by Netscape and Microsoft have become predominant. WebSee World Wide Web. web 1. a mesh of fine tough scleroprotein threads built by a spider from a liquid secreted from its spinnerets and used to trap insects 2. a similar network of threads spun by certain insect larvae, such as the silkworm 3. a fabric, esp one in the process of being woven 4. a membrane connecting the toes of some aquatic birds or the digits of such aquatic mammals as the otter 5. the vane of a bird's feather 6. Architect the surface of a ribbed vault that lies between the ribs 7. the central section of an I-beam or H-beam that joins the two flanges of the beam 8. any web-shaped part of a casting used for reinforcement 9. the radial portion of a crank that connects the crankpin to the crankshaft 10. a thin piece of superfluous material left attached to a forging; fin 11. the woven edge, without pile, of some carpets 12. short for World Wide Web
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Stridor at birth is unusual and generally denotes a fixed congenital narrowing, such as a laryngeal web or subglottic stenosis. |
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